....for an Atlantic landfalling hurricane.
And btw, coming a good month earlier than most of the competition.
"Hurricane Dean made its first landfall around 3:30 am (Central Time)
Tuesday with 165 mile per hour winds near Costa Maya, Mexico.
It is the first landfalling category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic basin
since Hurricane Andrew struck South Florida in 1992.
Its pressure of 906 millibars is the third lowest pressure at landfall
behind the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane in the Florida Keys and
Hurricane Gilbert in 1988 in Cancun, Mexico."
http://www.weather.com/newscenter/tr...=wxcenter_news
Just another global warming 'anecdote' that seems to happen
all too regularly these days.
Strongest Atlantic Hurricanes on Record
Wilma 882 mb Oct, 2005
Gilbert 888mb Sep, 1988
Florida Keys 892 mb Sep,1935
Allen 899 mb Oct, 1998
Mitch 905mb Oct, 1969
Camille 909 mb Aug, 1969
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/reports/mitch/mitch.html